App Store Ship Kit — take your iOS app from built to submitted in one session
An AI skill that turns your finished app into a complete App Store submission — icon, screenshots, metadata, support pages, and review notes — without a designer or a marketer.You built the app. Now comes the part nobody warns you about: the icon, the screenshots, the keyword field, the support URL, the privacy policy, the review notes — and the rejections.App Store Ship Kit is an installable AI skill (for Claude and compatible agents) that walks you through all of it in one focused session. It interviews you, generates the assets, drafts the copy, and hands you a submission-ready package. Built by an indie dev who shipped real apps with it.What's inside (bullet the deliverables): The Ship Kit skill — a self-contained SKILL.md that runs the whole pipeline: intake → app icon → marketing screenshots → metadata → support & legal pages → pre-submission checklist → App Review Notes → post-submission help. 4 screenshot methods, you choose: full-AI (image-edit), AI-composited hybrid (pixel-perfect real UI), fully-programmatic (free, no API key), or prompts-only. Multi-platform aware — iPhone, iPad, Mac, Apple Watch, TV, Vision, with current 2026 App Store sizes and one-platform-at-a-time handling. Companion Python scripts — resize to exact spec, generate icons/backgrounds, image-edit that frames your real screenshot without redrawing it. Ready-to-use templates — metadata worksheet, submission page with live character counts, privacy-screen SVG. A full worked example — the complete CopyAgain app set (real icon, 5 screenshots, filled metadata) so you see exactly what "done" looks like. Rejection playbook built in — drafts your App Review Notes to pre-empt Guideline 2.1, and if you still get rejected, the skill helps you interpret the guideline and draft a reply. Who it's for:Indie iOS developers, solo founders, and small teams who can build an app but dread — or keep getting rejected on — the App Store submission grind.I built this while shipping my own app, CopyAgain, across iPhone, iPad, and Mac. It survived two real App Store rejections (2.1, then 4.2), and every lesson from getting through them is baked into the kit — including the ones Apple doesn't document, like why an empty first-launch gets you rejected for "minimum functionality."
Get it → 9364730276533.gumroad.com